Yale Bulletin and Calendar
News Stories

May 19 - June 2, 1997
Volume 25, Number 32
News Stories

New Rand Lectureship honors 'great artist, designer and teacher'

The Cummins Engine Company of Columbus, Indiana, has donated funds to Yale in support of a Paul Rand Lectureship in the School of Art. The lectureship will bring to campus an eminent practitioner in the field of design who will deliver a public address that will foster greater understanding of the role of design in the visual arts.

"This gift will memorialize a great artist, designer, and teacher, and it will inspire future generations of designers to display in their work the commitment to quality and vision that Paul Rand manifested in his own," says President Richard C. Levin. "We are grateful to the Cummins Engine Company for their generous support."

James A. Henderson, chair and chief executive officer of Cummins Engine Company, Inc. says: "As Cummins' design consultant for 35 years, Paul Rand developed a strong, memorable identity for our company through the logo, annual report, and other images. The Paul Rand Lectureship at Yale University, with whom Paul and Cummins have had close relationships, is an opportunity for us to share his legacy with the design community."

Richard Benson, dean of the School of Art, notes: "Major corporations present themselves to the world through Paul Rand's extraordinary work; his riveting and irresistibly memorable logos stick in our mind's eye like no others. It is easy to forget that Paul Rand has also left as telling a mark in the minds of the many designers who were lucky enough to be his students. We are so pleased that these two sides of his complex life come together in the creation, by the Cummins Engine Company, of the Paul Rand Lectureship at the Yale University School of Art."

Paul Rand, 1914-96, was one of the world's most renowned graphic designers and a longtime Yale faculty member. His corporate logos for United Parcel Service, IBM, ABC, and Cummins Engine Company are familiar icons of American commerce. His design for Cummins in 1973 combines the company name and monogram into a single dramatic element that in Mr. Rand's words, "suggests speed and power." In his last book, "From Lascaux to Brooklyn," he wrote: "The design of a logo is largely the process of intuition, trial and error, skill, and good fortune. The ideal logo is simple, elegant, economical, flexible, practical, and unforgettable."

Mr. Rand served as art director for several magazines and was a consultant for numerous advertising agencies. In 1987 he was the first recipient of the Florence Prize for Visual Communication. His work is in the permanent collections of museums in the United States, Europe, and Japan.

Professor Rand taught at Yale from 1956 until his retirement in 1991. Among his books are "Thoughts on Design," "Design and the Play Instinct," "Paul Rand: A Designer's Art," "Design, Form, and Chaos" and "From Lascaux to Brooklyn."


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